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Category : "National Theatre"
©2006 Bruce Glikas for Broadway.com
Fiona Shaw
The National Theatre has announced the lineup for its fall 2009 season. Headlining the season will be Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children, starring Fiona Shaw in the title role. Also included is Tadeusz Slobodzianek's Our Class and the theatrical adaptation of Terry Pratchett's Nation.

Translated by Tony Kushner and directed by Deborah Warner, Mother Courage and Her Children begins performances on September 9 at the Olivier Theatre. The title character is known as one of the astonishing stage creations of the twentieth century, who drags her cart across battlefields, profiteering from a war that destroys her children, one by one. Shaw returns to the National having starred in productions of Happy Days, Richard II, The Good Person of Sichuan, Machinal, The Way of the World, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and The Powerbook. She has also been seen in the Broadway and West End productions of Medea, Hedda Gabler in the West End and The Wasteland.The production features scenic design by Tom Pye, costume design by Ruth Myers, lighting design by Jean Kalman, songs by Duke Special and sound design by Andrew Bruce and Nick Lidster....



©2006 Bruce Glikas for Broadway.com
Tom Stoppard
Tom Stoppard and Andre Previn's Every Good Boy Deserves Favour will return to the National Theatre in 2010, following a successful run this winter. The provacative play will begin performances at the Olivier Theatre from January 9 to February 17, directed by Felix Barrett.

In the play, a dissident is locked up in an asylum. If he accepts that he was ill, has been treated and is now cured, he will be released. He refuses. Sharing his cell is a real lunatic, Ivanov, who believes himself to be surrounded by an orchestra. As the dissident’s son begs his father to free himself with a lie, Stoppard’s darkly funny play asks if denying the truth is a price worth paying for liberty. The production is staged with a full orchestra playing Previn's original music...



©2007 Dave M. Benett for Broadway.com
Helen Mirren
Live broadcasts of theater productions patterned after the Metropolitan Opera's success in bringing their New York repertoire to cinemas at home and abroad will begin at the National Theatre on June 25 with a performance of Phedre, starring Dominic Cooper, Margaret Tyzack, and Oscar w...



©2007 Simon Annand
Craig Leo and Luke Treadaway in War Horse
The National Theatre's acclaimed and award-winning production of War Horse will be transferring to the West End. The production, based on Michael Morpurgo's novel and directed by Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris, will begin performances at the New London Theatre on March 28, 2009.

At the outbreak of World War One, Joey, young Albert's beloved horse, is sold to the cavalry and shipped to France. He's soon caught up in enemy fire, and fate takes him on an extraordinary odyssey, serving on both sides before finding himself alone in no man's land. But Albert cannot forget Joey and, still not old enough to enlist, he embarks on a treacherous mission to find him and bring him home. ...



Dominic Cooper Joins Helen Mirren in Phedre
December 17, 2008 11:57 AM
© 2008 Bruce Glikas for Broadway.com
Dominic Cooper
Dominic Cooper is set to star alongside previously announced star Helen Mirren in the National Theatre's production of Phedre. Directed by Nicholas Hytner, performances of the drama begin at the Lyttleton Theatre in June.

Cooper will play Hippolytus, stepson of the title character, to be portrayed by Mirren. He returns to the National Theatre after having been featured in its productions of The History Boys (a performance he reprised on Broadway), Mother Clapp's Molly House and His Dark Materials. His film credits include Skye in Mamma Mia!, Dakin in The History Boys and Grey in The Duchess, as well as the BBC's recent miniseries version of Sense & Sensibility....



©2007 Michael Brosilow
Deanna Dunagan and Amy Morton in
August: Osage County
August: Osage County may take place in a small town to the west of Tulsa, Oklahoma, a location that might not necessarily be expected to land with London theatergoers. But the Steppenwolf Theatre Company production, which opened on November 26 at the National Theatre, opened to reviews at least the equal of the admiring reactions to the play in New York and Chicago. And as Anna D. Shapiro’s staging settled in for an eight-week run at the Lyttelton auditorium, the play’s various creators were breathing a sigh of satisfaction that so potentially site-specific a piece has, as they say, legs.

With eight days of London performances under her belt, Tony nominee Amy Morton, who plays Barbara, the eldest and feistiest of the play’s three daughters, was relishing the quality of response characteristic of the London theater at its best. “They’re such keen listeners, the London audience,” Morton said, speaking by telephone prior to a Sunday matinee which is itself something of a London novelty: only recently has the National been able to mount shows on what is in most cases a British actor’s one day off. “That’s not to say that American audiences aren’t, [but] there’s something a little bit more subdued about London audiences where you just feel a complete and utter attention which is, you know, great.”...



Toby Jones, Joseph Millson, Francesca Annis, Michelle Dockery and Anastasia Hille will be seen at the National Theatre during the 2009 season.

Jones and Millson will star in Every Good Boy Deserves Favour, playing Ivanov and Alexander respectively. Written by Tom Stoppard and Andre Previn, the production begins performances at the Olivier Theatre on January 16. ...




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